Red Sox slugger David Ortiz named World Series MVP
Boston beats St. Louis 6-1 in Game 6 to win World Series
Most Valuable Papi.
David Ortiz walked off as the World Series MVP on Wednesday night, capping a dominant week in which he spurred the Boston Red Sox over St. Louis with a mix of power, patience and a most timely pep talk.
Ortiz hoisted reliever Koji Uehara after the final out of a 6-1 win, then Big Papi raised the gleaming gold trophy in his crowning achievement.
"I know I'm one of the forces for this ballgame and I like to take things personal," he said. "And that's been my whole career, a challenge."
"I wasn't trying to be the guy, but I know I got to get something done to keep the line moving," he said. "I don't even have to do anything today, I guess, the rest of the team took over."
Now a three-time champion, Oritz is the last link to the Red Sox team that swept the Cardinals in 2004 and ended an 86-year title drought.
After a while, the Cardinals simply gave up trying to get him out. Ortiz walked four times — three of them intentional — in the 6-1 win Wednesday night in Game 6 that clinched the championship.
When Ortiz came to the plate for the last time, in the eighth inning with the outcome safely in hand, Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina stood up and spoke to him in the batter's box. Molina softly patted Ortiz twice on the side, too.
Well done, pal.
Ortiz watched four more wide ones and trotted to first base, having piled up totals that not even slow-pitch softball players dream about: He reached base a whopping 19 times in 25 plate appearances.
The sellout crowd broke into thunderous chants of "MVP! MVP!" each time Ortiz batted. Quite a turnaround for the 37-year-old slugger who badly slumped in the AL championship series.
Ortiz hit 11 for 16 (.688) with two home runs and six RBIs against the Cardinals, and just missed a grand slam when Carlos Beltran robbed him by reaching over the short bullpen wall.
Asked to describe Ortiz, manager John Farrell paused.
"Well, I'd probably rather let his bat do the talking, because it's pretty special," he said.
Ortiz also drew eight walks and legged out a few infield hits, helped by St. Louis second baseman Matt Carpenter playing way out in shallow right field. At one point, Ortiz tied a Series record by reaching base in nine straight trips.
"He's as hot as anyone you're going to see this time of year," Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. "We tried to make tough pitches in tough situations, tried to pitch around him at times."
Unbelievable Ortiz
Ortiz's .760 on-base percentage and batting average were the second-highest in Series history, trailing only Billy Hatcher's marks of .800 and .750 in 1990 for Cincinnati.
As Ortiz came up in the first inning, Molina and plate umpire Jim Joyce talked about him.
"This guy's unbelievable," Molina said on Fox audio.
"He's fun to watch," Joyce said.
Yet for all the impact he made swinging the bat in getting 11 of Boston's 41 hits — or just standing there and watching the Cardinals pitch around him — Ortiz made an equally important contribution with his words.
With St. Louis leading the Series 2-1 and the Red Sox scuffling in Game 4, Ortiz called his bearded band together for an impromptu huddle in the dugout.
Ortiz said he merely told the guys to relax, stay loose and appreciate the moment. His teammates told a different story after Boston rallied to win.
"It was like 24 kindergartners looking up at their teacher. He got everyone's attention and we looked him right in the eyes," said Jonny Gomes, who answered with a winning home run. "That message was pretty powerful."
That's also what the Red Sox expect from their Dominican-born thumper, known for his neatly tailored suits and dazzling diamond jewelry.
Whatever the Red Sox need, and whenever they need it, he's ready. When the Series shifted to St. Louis and there was no designated hitter, he adeptly moved from the DH spot to first base.
He did the same thing way back in the 2004 Series, and again in 2007 when the Red Sox swept Colorado.
As the Red Sox celebrated on the field after the final out, Ortiz considered what it meant to win a third title. Easy, he answered.
"That means I'm getting old," he said.